| Literature DB >> 33568533 |
Yoann Le Bagousse-Pinguet1,2, Nicolas Gross2,3, Hugo Saiz2,4, Fernando T Maestre5,6, Sonia Ruiz2, Marina Dacal2,6, Sergio Asensio6, Victoria Ochoa6, Beatriz Gozalo6, Johannes H C Cornelissen7, Lucas Deschamps8, Carlos García9, Vincent Maire8, Rubén Milla2, Norma Salinas10, Juntao Wang11,12, Brajesh K Singh11,12, Pablo García-Palacios13,14.
Abstract
The functional traits of organisms within multispecies assemblages regulate biodiversity effects on ecosystem functioning. Yet how traits should assemble to boost multiple ecosystem functions simultaneously (multifunctionality) remains poorly explored. In a multibiome litter experiment covering most of the global variation in leaf trait spectra, we showed that three dimensions of functional diversity (dispersion, rarity, and evenness) explained up to 66% of variations in multifunctionality, although the dominant species and their traits remained an important predictor. While high dispersion impeded multifunctionality, increasing the evenness among functionally dissimilar species was a key dimension to promote higher multifunctionality and to reduce the abundance of plant pathogens. Because too-dissimilar species could have negative effects on ecosystems, our results highlight the need for not only diverse but also functionally even assemblages to promote multifunctionality. The effect of functionally rare species strongly shifted from positive to negative depending on their trait differences with the dominant species. Simultaneously managing the dispersion, evenness, and rarity in multispecies assemblages could be used to design assemblages aimed at maximizing multifunctionality independently of the biome, the identity of dominant species, or the range of trait values considered. Functional evenness and rarity offer promise to improve the management of terrestrial ecosystems and to limit plant disease risks.Keywords: complex species assemblages; litter decomposition; nutrient cycling; plant pathogens; trait distributions
Year: 2021 PMID: 33568533 PMCID: PMC7896339 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2019355118
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205